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Technical Papers and Discussions - Mechanical Properties of Steel - Stress Rupture of Heat-resisting Alloys as a Rate Process (Metals Tech., Feb. 1947, T. P. 2137, with discussion)By A. S. Nowick, E. S. Machlin
One of the main criteria used to rate the heat-resisting properties of alloys is stress rupture.' During a stress-rupture test a tensile specimen is held under a constant load at a constant tempe
Jan 1, 1948
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Secondary Recovery -The Thermal Recovery Process – An Analysis of Laboratory Combustion DataBy Fred H. Poettmann, A. L. Benham
correlation of waters and identification of mixtures of two and three waters is important in secondary recovery evaluation studies and studies involving underground movement of waters. The importance
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Lake Superior Paper - The Efficiency of Built-Up Wooden Beams (Discussion, 993)By Edgar Kidwell
To any one acquainted with the practical conditions surrounding the mining engineer and mine-manager, especially in this country, the presentation to the American Institute of Mining Engineers of a pa
Jan 1, 1898
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The Platinum MetalsBy Edmund M. Wise
NATURE has provided us with many metals, but with few really good ones, and frequently the better metals are the rarer. It is to this circumstance that many physical metallurgists, inventors, and just
Jan 1, 1953
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Institute of Metals Division - The Isothermal Transfer from Solid to Liquid in Metal SystemsBy J. M. Lommel, B. Chalmers
The transfer of material from the solid to the liquid states can be accomplished in several ways. It occurs by the application of heat in the more familiar metallurgical operations of melting but it
Jan 1, 1960
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Stress Corrosion in Relation to Aircraft Components ? with Discussion on Aircraft ComponentsBy C. W. George, Bruce Chalmers
The authors enumerate the factors which appear, from their observations and practical experience of failure of aircraft components in Great Britain, to be responsible for causing a metal or alloy to f
Jan 1, 1945
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Papers - Milling at the Permanente Cement Plant (T. P. 1359)By A. M. Kivari
Operations at the cement plant of the Permanente Corporation, in the hills about 45 miles south of San Francisco and 12 miles west of San Jose, are interesting to the members because of the adoption o
Jan 1, 1942
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Papers - Milling at the Permanente Cement Plant (T. P. 1359)By A. M. Kivari
Operations at the cement plant of the Permanente Corporation, in the hills about 45 miles south of San Francisco and 12 miles west of San Jose, are interesting to the members because of the adoption o
Jan 1, 1942
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Reservoir Engineering - General - Rock Rupture as Affected by Fluid PropertiesBy W. G. Bearden, P. P. Scott, G. C. Howard
This paper concerns the rupture or breakdown of rock formations as related to drilling, completing, and stimulating production of wells, and comprises data compiled from a study of literature and reco
Jan 1, 1953
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Institute of Metals Division - Catastrophic Oxidation of Stainless Steel in the Presence of Lead OxideBy John C. Sawyer
A brief review is given to show that catastrophic oxidation of stainless steel in the presence of lead oxide is similar in many respects to catastrophic oxidation as caused by MoO3 and V2O5, Experimen
Jan 1, 1962
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Future Slurry Transport of Large Particles Based on Operations with Coarse CoalBy D. L. McCain
Slurry transportation of coarse coal from the mining face to the preparation plant has proved successful in a West Virginia underground mine. Coal has been pumped from the mining section for several m
Jan 1, 1976
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Institute of Metals Division - Electrotransport and Resistivity in the Molten Bismuth-Tin SystemBy John D. Verhoeven, Edward E. Hucke
An experimental technique has been developed for the measurement of the rate of electrotransport to a precision of 1 pct in the molten Bi-Sn system. Results are presented across the phase diagram from
Jan 1, 1963
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Papers - Electrical Methods - A Contribution to the Theory of the Interpretation of Resistivity Measurements Obtained from Surface Potential Observations (With Discussion)By R. J. Watson
In an earlier paper, Ehrenburg and Watson1 published the develop ment for a potential function by which it is possible to obtain the electric potential at points on the surface of the ground when a cu
Jan 1, 1934
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Papers - Proportions of Free Fusible Material in Coal Ash, as an Index of Clinker and Slag Formation (T. P. 1175, with discussion)By H. L. Brunjes, G. B. Gould
The softening temperature of coal ash, as determined in the laboratory, has been used for years as an indication of the tendency of coal to form clinker and slag. It has not, however, provided an inde
Jan 1, 1940
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Papers - Proportions of Free Fusible Material in Coal Ash, as an Index of Clinker and Slag Formation (T. P. 1175, with discussion)By G. B. Gould, H. L. Brunjes
The softening temperature of coal ash, as determined in the laboratory, has been used for years as an indication of the tendency of coal to form clinker and slag. It has not, however, provided an inde
Jan 1, 1940
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Using Electric Furnaces and Heaters To Determine the Free- Swelling Index of CoalBy E. Swartzman
THE free-swelling index, a numerical value for the free-swelling properties of coal, is being used to an increasing extent in specifying coal for burning in various types of equipment. The empirical s
Jan 10, 1951
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Papers - Engineering Research - Pressure Distribution about a Slotted Liner in a Producing Oil Well (T.P. 1222)By Frank G. Miller
The lower cost of producing oil from naturally flowing wells compared with pro-luction costs accruing from artificial lifting methods has stimulated much research, rith the joint purpose of extending
Jan 1, 1941
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Papers - Engineering Research - Pressure Distribution about a Slotted Liner in a Producing Oil Well (T.P. 1222)By Frank G. Miller
The lower cost of producing oil from naturally flowing wells compared with pro-luction costs accruing from artificial lifting methods has stimulated much research, rith the joint purpose of extending
Jan 1, 1941
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Some Pressing Needs of our Iron and Steel Manufactures.*By A. L. Holley
IT has been customary at our opening sessions, for the presiding officer to address you on the general development of one or another of our several professions, or upon some important feature of Minin
Jan 1, 1876
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Institute of Metals Division - The Effect of Copper, Nickel, Iron, and Chromium on the Tensile Properties of Preferentially Oriented Beryllium SheetBy F. M. Yans, A. D. Donaldson, A. R. Kaufmann
Beryllium was mixed by powder. metallurgical techniques with copper, nickel, iron, and chromium, respectively, to form beryllium -rich binary alloys which Mere then extyuded and rolled transtverse to
Jan 1, 1962